Newspaper Page Text
ruNT* 1 **?. NOVEMBER 7. 1293.
TUN BANNCT-WERALP. ATHENS. GEORGIA’
Reginald Denny in Big Special
^ "' At the Palace Theatre Tonight
■■■
Lionel Barrymore and Alma Rubens ip “Enemies of
1 Women,” Special Sensation Thursday and
Friday—Georgia Bulldog Orches-
' tra At the Night Shows. , i ‘
Gathered By T. Larry Gatitti
fthenian Has One of
County** Finest Herd of
I Jersey Cattle, Says Gantt
I There Is an old saying, “You
lever know what is pnder a rock
Jntil you turn It over.*' The peo-
lie of Athens and this section have
_i conception of the wonderful Ba
lances made in ra<rmfng, stock
; and kindred persults con-
j with agriculture, <uatt'l they
; sought out and made public. *
I w> very much doubt if one Alb-
liian in fifty or more are aware
If the fact that?'we have w.thlt*
|ur city limits, on Hall street, one
f the finest herds of Jersey cat-
s not only In Georgia, but on this
nent. In fact, the Isle of Jer-
Ly, in the English Channel, that
propagated this breed’ of cattle,
■as no finer or s bitter bred anl-
Lls than this hertl contains. The
ttle raisers of that Island sold
* $30,000, "on the hoof." as their
.jest champion 'bull, to -be 1m-
Wed to America. Th*« price did
Jot include the cost of transport
kg the aq'mal across thp water.
I This bull was named Zenlas
i, and Ita sale to an American
d almost as much Interest
; English cattle men as when
tarnum bought the mammoth ele
phant Jumbo. The bull was the
Brand champion over the Island of
lersey for five years, and carried
Iff every prise.
J Now In this Athens herd Is a
Irandson of.Zenla’s Sultan, bred
and owned by.Mr. WilVam Mc-
fehrson of our City. This Athens
ill is a brother of Adeline's SU1-
,n, owned iff the Pebble Hill
lantatlon, of TbomasvlUe, Ga.
his animal took the first prise
and of J
i the Island of Jersey. It was ex-
Prof. Jarnlghn, who has charge of
the cattle department of the State
Agricultural College. Of course he
Is .thoroughly posted on thB sub
ject and from him we aeeuiwf ft*J|
Information about thjs herd and
which Prof. Jarnigan said’ was one
of the 4'nest on the American con
tinent. and a credit to Athens. Mr.
McPherson lead up for our Inspec
tion the different animals and
F-rof. Jarnigan gave ns their pedi
grees and pointed out their mark
ings. He said the entire herd is
high bred animals.
■Mr. MdPherson, by h's accent,
shows his nativity and like all of
his race, is brimful! and overflow
ing with push and* energy. He
bought a three acre lot, with
running water, on Hall street, one
of the. new extensions of our city,
and has built a nice brick cot
tage. He has modern barns and
every preparation for catfng for
his cattle. He says he milks them
by hand. He fees small lots cut
off where his cattle can graze and
exercise. He has bought a farm
out on the Bogart road which he
will in time use for his cattle and
to raise food for them.
Every animal is groomed and in
perfect conditfon. He has two Lulls,
both of whTch he raised, one four
years old 1 and the other a yearling,
but d perfect picture of an animal.
Mr. McPherson is anything bit
a boaster, but readily answers any
question. But a gentleman who
first told- us abont this herd says
that Mr. McPherson can easily get
$10,000 for his older bull, and if
offered for sale where high-class
osttle ace appreciated rft would
the* land not planted in cotton is
clear gain, besides the increased
price for the staple **
These food crops simply iman
the difference,between debt and In-
dependnee and penury and pros
perity.
And brother farmer, do not hug
the hallucination to your bosom
that you can steal a march on oth-
er farmers by talking reduction ir
acreage and then next spring plant
your house top and front yard Ir
the staple. The same ideas that
i enter your mind are also planted in
the mind of every other cotton
grower.
This section is now on the sure
and straight road to nroenerity and
independence. Do not let us lose
what we have gained by becoming
again the slave to King Cotton.
Keep down your cotton acreage, it
matters ndt what other farmers
and sections do and you will be on
is safe side*.
Continue to grow the greatest
abundance of food crops and makt
of cotton a surplus nnd one ~ of
several other money crops.
fair. Of great importance is the|por t * nt matters for our considers-
profit.
Harding Asked
Resignation of
Director Forbes
WASIIINGTTON D. C—PTf.i-
dent Harding called for the resig
nation of Charles R. Forbes as Dl-
ibited at the J 1 * \ bring $16,000. This gentleman also
■hows of the middle west and won
I'rst pt’ze a» champion or grand
Ibampion at'&ll^four shows this
FELLS OF
IWNBR | M j,
Iro they m*
fhereon is
i invest!]
The above Is by way of prologue,
ow let us tell you about the >en-
rprising citizen who has produced
id owns this herd.
Some twenty year. a(0 William
IcPhenon, a Scotlah Hi*hiander,
Uh hi. bride, a Mist Hutchexon,
Uwlandccl-ftom near Gla.sow,
lets F'tteon year,
to AtliCns. Mr. Me.
alned c.ttle man.
conditions around
.then, and found the climate,
ster, natural Brasses and all oth-
.sHentlala erpedalty adapted to
a successul raisins of fine cat-
I. Of court# the Isle of Jersey
Ini off the coast of Scotland,
knew all about that breed of
ttle, and also what strains to
■rrhase. H, started business on
a few i head but bought the
blooded animals. He has now
heed h of ns fine cattle as
ever collected. Every animal
of the heat stralna and are beau-
I fluty
li-'S.
It was our good fortunte while
Mr. iMcPIierson'o to meet there
told us that a cltlsen of Athens
wanted a heifer of thla fine atraln
and traded Mr. McPherson two
good cows and gave $300 In cash
for one animal. One of hie cows,
Austin's May Polls, was twice In
tip, Stato class champion of floor-,
If*.
This herd Is one of the great at
tractions of Athens and when
known will be a splendid advertl.t-
ment for ocr city and sacUon. Mr.
McPherson saya this Is a splendid
section of country to prodneo high-
class cattle, and with our long
summorn and natural grasses, and
the fact that all the clovers and
cultivated grasses can be success-
COMMENTS MTHE
HR CO. PLAN
fact that thefaAner’s margin of 1 tlon. The gradual organization of
profit is in general higher thishural communities for hauling their
vear than last yea t. Scarcity of {produce to market will encourage
labor has forced him to {aise «. his • farmers to grow other money crops
crops With the toil of hipiself and tha nthe fleecy staple and tend to
family. It bag been hatd, grind* (thetr orgaq'zattpn and in marketing
ing work, bub it means more j crops, concert of action.
*’■ j vonr If c.bai •„ ‘ nHuon o» $ imrit-H t\. poroe* an i>«-
I .nltabL* f “ ^ 1 a ' r ' ctnr ot the Veterans’ Bureau, as
; ^,. .JUS? uTh 16 ’ : 11 rMU " ° r < hf Perryvlll.e • Md..
™ • 11 .,‘ h0 P .T I surplus sale transection" Brig. Gen-
: duce grown I* this, section, the ] rrn , ^ j h „ ta t, pre , Ment .,
■country will be In a far more i wrionill trlp „ d and ph „,cia n
I prosperous and Independent con- before the senate tnv „.
,dUlon than since its earliest set- commltee Wednesday.
j tlement. Our sci Is hav.e been pre- I ■
pared for cotton-growing by years ni . w{lL{„ cmt W411
(of clean cultivation, and the libmus {"*• vvlIKinSOll vYlll
ssd fertility exhausted oy Speak on Armistice
the crop. These must be overcome
by proper fertilising and growing
humus before We can cake the best
crops of other products. A gradual
passage from cotton to corn, peas,
beans, hay and* vegetables, assist
ed by growing cattle, will, restore
the sail to ita former and wanted
fertility. This our farmers are rap-
fdly'dotng by plaht'ng alfalfa, the
clover* and other legum* crops.
Within the last few years the pro*
dttetiveness of many farms has
been largely Increased, and still
the good work goes on.
this
Nearly every farmer
section will raise enough meat to
supply him next year and some
will have it for sale. The intro
duction of improved breeds of
^iwine has greatly encouraged the
raising of hogs, for the same
amount of food that it required to
fatten one pound of the old-fash
ioned razor-back will now produce
two or more ' pounds of bacorn
Again, it once required that a
hog must be two years old befote
it was considered large enough
for slaughter, but we are now
killing porkers at ten or twelve
months old that will pull down
the scales at 300 pounds or bet
ter.
A number of farmer* have en
dorsed the Turner cobnty plan and
program. The following !• that for
operating a one-horse farm:
Three to fix good producing milch
cow*, (preferably pure bred).
Two good brood now* (preferab
ly pure bred).
Thirty td forty brood hens (pre
ferably pure bred.
Ten acrea In corn, velvet btfine
and North Carolina peanuts.
Five acre* in oat*, followed bj
pea* or other hay crop.
Four acre* In wheat, followed by
Spanish peanut*.
Five acre* In sweet potato®*, and (cure,
trucking crop*.
“What have we gained out of
Armistice ond the sacrifices that
to it." will be the subject
of Dr. J. C. Wilkinsons ‘sermon
next Sunday night at the Ffrst
Baptist church. Pews will be re
served for ex-service men.
Dr. Wilkinson will spekk Sunday
morning on “Can the church fur
nish again a* It did of old saints
nnd martyrs?" Special music will
feature, the morning and evening
Bervices. Both sermons promise to
he unusually interesting.
Hog killing time is now on us,
and soon the dying squeal of the
porker tfill be heard all over "the
land. One of our old citizens who
has been noted for his fine bacon
and hams, gives us the following
facts about "saving bacon": The
first essential is to be sure that
perature is 38 degrees P. There
Meat should not be allowed to
freeze either before or during the
process of curing. The ideal tem-
perautre is 38 degrees F. There
are two methods of curing, the dry
cure or the sweet pickle or brine
cure. The former is most popu
lar. In the dry curing method the
bay j following mixture is needed: For
leach 100 pounds of meat use 8
Three acres In sorghum
crop*.
Twelvtf
ture, sown
grass and Lesperdeza clover. .
Five acres in cotton. |2 ounces of red pepper. Mix the
We have the above* substituted ingredients well, rub the meat
acre* in permanent pas- j pounds of salt, 24 1-2 pounds of
rn In carpet grass, Dalliv'syrup or molasses (slightly warm-
crops best suited this section
for ribben cane and other , things
peculiar td South Georgia.
Delegations of farmers from
many counties In Georgia have en
dorsed the above as a model crop
one-horse farmer to plAnt-
By only planting five acres in cot
ton he can easily keep well worked
these crops.
The greatest danger is that en
couraged by the high price of cot-
ton, many farmers will next year (HOW TO
over plant themselves In the sta-J* RESERVE
nle, when they will experience the,
thoroughly with the mixture and
pack in a< barrel or.box. On the
third day unpack the meat and re
pack it to insure thorough- con
tact (with the cure mixture, and
then let it remain until the euro is
complete. Allow two days in cure
for each pound of individual pieces
of meat weigh. After the meat is
cured hang it in the smoke-house
without washing.
Louisiana Man Attributes Hie for.
tunate Escape from a Serious
Epidemio to the Use, of
Black-Draught
Holden, La.—“When I waa just a
boy at home," says Mr. F. D .Rob
erson, of thi* pluci, “my father and
mother used Black-Draught and I
founj) then what u good medicine'it
was far the liver and for Indiges
tion. I have used it on from then
to now, finding it was good for
headaches, indigestion, bloating af
ter, meal*. and colds.
VA couple of years ago, every one,
alrnont, around me waa having the
•flu.’ ; I took a cold nnd was feel
ing bad. 1 thought then I would
take Black-Draught. I took a good
big dose every nlgbt and I can't be
gin .tp tell Just how much good it
did jpe- 1 was able to stay up and
witit un others, and J believe my
good fortune was due to tho use of
Block-Draught. I wouldn't be|
without it in my home, for it Is the
best medicine I have ever used.”
By keeping your Ivler and stom<
ach In good order, you stand In lit
tle danger of catching the serious
ills that occasionally become epl
demies, spreading through town
and country.
Black-Draught la composed'
, medicinal roots and herbs, finely
; powdered and carefully mixed in
Tomorrow Alright
Night’’. Tonic. — rr..h .Ir, . coed
■Imp and an Ml Tablet to mat. your
(M T.bl.t.)
IMfU a beneficial Influence Ot! the
dlgeetiv* and eliminative eyetem—the
Stomach, Liver end Bewele.
Tonight—tebe en M Tablet—It*
action le ee different you will be de
lightfully eurprteed.
Used for over
111 reeulta of the crop failure* In Jhc , Bwee } pickle or brine the right proportions to act na*ur-
— . — v—. o.,t^ method the rollowinz mixture 1 .... ... -.1, n
South Georgia. Tou hear dally
fully grown here. It should be one farmer remark. -I made
of the beat cattle raljf'ng countries
In America.
1 M<r. McPherson hai also a ken
nel of high trod Scotch Colllee,
and which dogs alwaye go with
cattle and can be trained to at
tend them ae > man.
We liked Prof. Jarnigan about
tho relented milking machine. He
said It waa a succeaa and a. prac
tical aa lending a message by v’re-
The Invention of labor and time-
saving appliances Is solving the
labor problem for farmers as well
as other callings.
When farmers and cattle men
visit Athens they should ba shown
Mr. McPherson's Jeriey hard.
method the following mixture; , ny on ' , he .tornr rh nnd liver,
should be prepared: For each 100 hai been found to Improve dlgee-
pounds of meat tue 0 pounds of tlon.'and to relieve conetlpation In
salt (10 pounds if the weather is a prompt, safe .ray.
warm), 2 1-2 pounda to sugar or
4 pounds of syrup, 2 ounces of
saltpeter, and 4 1-2 gallons of wa-
WMTii ,.v,r ™* ,™‘ X L 1 U 1 i e ilt ,n o 0 “ ld h o^r
spit of poison. Bo aa a wise andk*"* 1 /- f ° r ' »^ t f" d
mistake In not planting more lan*"
In cotton this year.” Five acre*
of cotton to the plow Is all that n
farmer rhould plant to be on the
safe elde. If wt have a wet sum
mer the* boll WHTfl Will get you- tr
conservative crop the above Tur
ner county plan le recommended
Our farmers are now getting out
of the woods. Don’t make the fa*
tal mistake of relapsing into a cot-
tonto. A small cotton crop will
bring you more money than n bum
per crop.
Prosperity Depends
Upon Farm Success
1 ton It matters not how hard you
(work or the amount of puism >ou
'Georgia mnde good crop* of cotton
.'and thla year they over-planted
! themselves, and having a great dea)
Tr* greatest
farmer* th|
'hat encoui
staple is
|[argely inert
daily
r regret
hiorc cotton
efficient
'of rain, their cotton was a failure can’t have real solid prosperity
j and they had no other crop to take until the farmer is on his feet.
fhat you i
| ,ff to consii
an his foi
f Wi t-vils _
•her crops?
hboiit set!
in cot]
that threr.t-jihe place of the fleecy staple. On (Business can’t be sound while the
ling yea.* is the other hand, farmers In the farmer Is receiving less for h 1 !
the high price .^unties around Athens wisely .crops than it costa him to raise
[ing. they will! greatly reduced their cotton acre-(them. Of the vast fundamental
i cotton acreage, j n g e and planted large food crops, (importance of agriculture 1 there
icra express providence smiled upon them and jean be no question. Every year it
. did not plant[they have'well filled k'rna and.creates billions of dollsrs’ worth
year. Mr. FIror, J turner* and their cotton is a dear'ef new wealth—furnishes the raw
ty agent, says, gain. Our farmer* are now gettings material for food and clothing—it if
prell fix the acre-1 their h*ad* above water, and they forms an indispensable factor, not; .
fecr but the mat-!should : -at y—- continue the wise-only for natiomU prosperity but IrnriftiflPPAnlp Meat
how many acre* and conservative pinn th«y have ior national existence." , C—- - — —
hands keep clear' ‘ ' " n ‘~ *- J t
set'aside to cool before using.
Place the hams in the bottom-of,
the container, the shoulders next,
bacon sides and small cuts on top.|
Cover with bosrds and put weight j
of stone or .brick on top. Pour on
the pickle mixture msking sure
that it Covers the meat thorough
ly. In seven days take out all the
meat, remove the pickle, replace
the meat in the container, weigh
it down and then cover again with
pickle. Repeat the process every
seven dsys until the cure is com
pleted, when each' piece of meat
receives the proper cure remove
Woman's Specialist
Mr. Harry Hodgson on hia re-
, turn from New York haa handed „ r „~ r
■ apply. Of courae the »an.e condl- ni a aection of a daily paper that J. , rom th pickle nnd wash ifin
Ilona prevail In thla aeet.on. F-i ylvea tome valuable information lukewarm water. String it and
! L" “S & "cW’U'uA:; JXd^ “ amoke*houie for
in the New York Times. The key
note of this publication is: M We
smoking. Hang the pieces so that
they do not touch and allow the|
smoke to circulate freely. Meatj
, Meat
should hang 6 or 7 feet above the
tire to avoid heating too much.
Hard wood, is best. Fire should
be kept going continuously if the
smoking is to be completed in one
operation. The temperature should
riot b® allowed to go below 120
degrees F.
Restaurant Man Didn’t
Eat His Own Food
"It’s pretty tough for a restau
rant men to have etomach trouble.
My cuetomere wer<- always telling
me 1 ought to rat in a good restau
rant. The fact,, was I couldn't eat
a thing that didn't bloat mo up
nhd no medione or doctors helped
1 tried everything recommend-
f
.
V / .
■
ms
' ‘i
'ffl&SI
. _/
'Lionel Barrymore, Wm. H. Thompson and William Collier, Jr.
' ' i® * Counopolitan Production
•'ENEMIES OF WOMEN" *
Distributed by Goldwyn - Cosm of oh'tan
Palace Special Attraction _ Thursday and Friday.
4 GREAT 8TORY—
A GREATER PICTURE!
One of America's greatest, au
thors, Jack London, trnveior'hni.
student of life, wrote this _ latest
screen triumph: a colorful, gripping
story that Is nothing short of sen.
sational—nothing like it ever in
pictures before.
Jteftlnnld Denny plays the leading
►Jc, In this’ hi* greatest pictut®.
Worntn will lo?e him, men will ad-
lie him. »
Two of the year’s greatest picture
succesee,' "The Flirt’
Flame of Life” were
9 p. m. shows on Thursday and
Friday nights extra to tho special
feature picture "Enemies of Wo-
I dire
Hobart Henley, who Also directed
this one. This is his greatest pic
ture.
Your whole family should tee thla
big. clean, inroiring story of real
men nnd women. Rugged action le
Interspersed with love momenta and
dramatic situations as fine as any
y<Ai could wish for. You’ll nan
Never tn the annals of |
picture history has a film bet
corded such universinl api
tlon and achieved such a n
wide success as ha* f “Emm:
Women," the Cosmopolitan Co»p«.- »
. ation's magnificent plcturizatlon
and “The * ot tho plsating romance by Vicentf
lirected b> | Blaaco Ibanez, the celebrated
Spanish author ot "The Four llorsf
men" and “T’.lood nnd Sand" fame.
Brought to Uie screen at a cost of
more than $1,000,000 and embfl-
lished with n weatlh ot beauty that
surpasses any ever put into
making of a photoplay,
of Women" has been acclaimed bj
critics and public alike wherovrr I
If. th. cnitcbt fnt.riMnmcnt ov- h** b«n iPreMoted » a master-
ir, . 4 . -» . • f. • * i piece m cinematography.
,'TI»® World premiere of “Enemies ,
BULLDOG ORCHESTRA / ( ot Women at the Central Theatre
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY : ln New York provM one of th.
Thursday and Friday of thl. I n ° f 'll 0 T?,"’
' . ...» wn y theatrical season, one of tho
week the Palace present. I-Iotiel mt dlrtln*ui.hea audience, which ’
Barrymore nnd Alma Rubens
"Enemies of Women," one of the
picture bite of the yedr. At ■ the
niiht shows the Georgin ViuDdci
Orrhrstrn will be t^e added at
traction. This organisation of
ed nnd nt hut M.yr'a Wonderful “ v '"* n “‘ ,py ' ,M * y ' *“«’ look l"*
R« medy, and I assure you I didn't
have to look any further. Since
taking it I have been a w,ell man.”
it l* a pimple, harmless preparation
that removes the catarrhal mucus
from the Intestinal tract and al
lays the Inflammation which causes
practically all stomach, liver and
intestinal ailments, including ap*
pendicitle. One dope wJU convince
■or money refunded. For sale by ail
druggists.—Advertisement.
LADIES' OMEN
Georgia boys hate a program
classy aa well as Jazzy numbers
that will be the musical knockout
of the season. Thla will be at th*
ever witnessed a film pr«
being present. Not only w^re
era ot the theatre ip evident
the world of society was we
presented, the first audience in
cluding such prominent person* In
the life of tho metropolis ns Mayo-
John F. Hylan, Will Hays. Bor.i.nnt
M. Baruch, Howard Chandler
Christie, Charles Dana Gibson, Mar
cus Loew and many others. .
Seat Sale Opens Tomorrow
For Lasses White Minstrels
Farmers Raising
ut neglecting his
nk it bps been
t five or rtx
plow
plat.
adopted. But even if farmer* were. The following declarations _
Injured against the boll weevil,made: No one crop is King. High
l *“ “ **■ cner *
pest, they should not increase their j wages are better than cheap la-
cotton acreage. Here I* something {bor. Europe can’t wreck our
for every farmer to paste on blz i prosperity. Only our own poiitic-
»>ount all that the averag* farm-. memory: I** 1 ** c*” hurt “ the day
T properly cultivate and sue-! a fifteen million bate crop at of opportunity. To show that
| r < ""fully fight life weevil. - -
IJELL8 OF l
Experience
Except th® w^t spring that de-
Iwyed planting, this has been an
| exceptionally favorable year for
“ owing cotton; ■ A- dry spell ret in
the very time boll weevils be-
i to do their jmo*t destructive
* nk and which enabled farmer*
11 ""cceesfully “ apply calcium V-
r Ba Tho writer* for some twelve
Tho writer* for some'
, ni0r * >cara has been combatting
ne boll weevil on his farm In Miss-
‘ M, l>Pi. and we studied the pest. It
r 1 " »>cen our experience that a dry
peai cak m ak® a fairly good cotton
uiwJer Vju. mt' rli coadliicsu CANT DO
n 1 ht there be a rainy summer
\y fall, at the time cotton ia tak-
in*
:* per pound would aell at (on® crop is King, the following is
$750,000,000. (the percentage of all crops
A ten million bale crop at twen- grown: Corn. 13 per cent; forage,
ty cents per pound, wouldl bring 110 per cent; coUon. 0 per cent;
$1 200 000,000. , vegetables, 7 per cent; wheat. 6
Or a ten ml U«n bale crop, aa w»,pcr cent; fruit, 4 per cent; oats, 4
will probably have thla year, at per cent; other crops, 10 per cent;
thirty cent* p.r , pound, would animal producers, 37 per cent. In
bring $1,710,000.900. |1W3, the value of the wheat crop
Why should the south lose $100,-1 was $60,761,380 lets than in 1922;
000,000 i or more a year by raising value of the corn crop, $808,707,-
more cotton than It can sell at a '488 more than in 1922. The in-
profit? An extra 6.000.000 balea crease in the value of the corn
would mean the coat of cultivation, 'crop alone le sixteen times the de-
picking. ginning and transportation creese An the value of the wheat
. .. ' «... I— t.'nvnn Tha rmnn rtf ihn tTnltai)
and then r.duee the price eo as to'erop. The farmer* of the United
brine the former lee* than half th«: State* will have from crop* alone
price for the smellier crop.
. ./ill have from crops
I in excess of a billion dollars seven
ihupdred million dollars more rev-
BETTER
price* are now u|» 26'
•compared with 1921. N
food and other'whole story is told when
-y crop, th.i farmer, crow on|thai crojo n.e good
jenue In 1923 than In 1922. CJop 1t1*» him- «n ofder that the clt-
! xi .u ' Wow. nf Aik-"- tny form
The counties around Athens are
in much betteV shape than tide
time last year. The cotton ciup,
now about gathered,’ is at l^rt
onothiid targer than laat yrar.
Corn, except Inn. dry atr^aks.
is far l>etter and the largest hay
crop ever grown has i- en piaiie
and saved without a drop of rain
to injure its value. The price* of
cotton la much better than last
year, there will be less feed to be
bought, and the farmer will have
money to use for other purposes.
Our farmers are rapidly taking on
the idea of diversification, and
some are going into dairying and
trucking in a small way and the
production of poultry and eggs has
greatly Increased. The establish
ment of the Athens curb market
and the community trucks have en
couraged farmers to seek other
money crops than cotton.
Remedies may oome and reme
dies may go In one long fleeting
procession and are soon forgotten;
but Dr. Plerce'a wonderful herbal
remedies have steadily endured foi
over fifty year* and are a* pcrular
splendid record Indeed/
Dr. R. ;V. Piirce, wnen a young
nnd rising physician In Pennsyl
vania, learned the oecret* olf Na
ture’s healing; he noticed the ef
fect of certalp herbs that regulate
the dloordfrs of . women, also that
the Indian women passed easily
through motherhood, and, using
the same herbs and roots, he com
pounded an unequalled remedy for
women, which he called Dr. Pierce’
Favorite Prescription. Thousands
of unsolicited testimonials from
grateful women bear witnees to
its healing powers. Dr. Pierce’s
phenomenal auccess was due to the
purity of his m«dlcines nnd to the
confidence he enjoyed os a lending
nnd honored citizen of Buffalo,
where he founded the Invalids* ho.
tel, known as a model sanitarium
throughout the United States and
Canada,
Pond. lOo for trial sample to D**.
Plerof’e Invalids Rote!. Buffalo, X
“ Advert*
Use Grandma’s'8ao* Tee and Sul
phur Recipe and Nobody
Will. Know
The use of Sage and 8ulphur
for restoring faded, gray hair to
ita natural color datea back to
grandmother's time. She used It
V» keep her hair beautifully dark,
glossy and attractive. Whenever
her hair to<yc on that dull, fade<*
or streaked appearance, this aim-
Pi* mixture was applied with won
derful effect.
But brewing at home te mussy
nnd out of date. Nowadays, by
asking at any drug store for s
bottle of “Wyeth's Sage and Sul
phur Compound ” you will get tbl*
famous old preparation, Improved
by the addition of "other Ingredl-
entr, which can be depended unon
to rrstore natural color end beau
ty to the hair.
A well-known downtown druggist
says it darkens the hnlr so natur
ally nnd evenly that nobody ca«
tell It has been applied. You sim
ply dampen a sponge or soft brush
with ft /ind drnw |hl* through youi
hnfr, taking one strand nt a time
By morning the gra:* hair disap
pears, nnd after another application
or two. It becomes beautifully dark
and glossy.—Advertleement.
CLUBS TO HOLD
JOINT MEETINGS
MOULTRIE—The, Moultrie civic
club*, the Lions, Rotary and KI-
wants, will hold Joint meetings cy.
ry three months. The suggestion
b*t such meetings be h41d
which matters of Importance to the
community at large could be dls
d. was, made by the Kiwenle
Club and the other two club*, by
p^ahlmous vote gave tjyelr approv
members of the civic club*
member* Try the Moultrie
cowmlMt
“LASSES” WHIITE, tho Southern Sunflower as Ixzema Itch the
speed demon op the Blackville automobile speedway at the Colonial
Theatre Saturday night, November 10th.
Under the remarkably success-. hotels. The scenic artists wore
ful management of Spaeth and given carte blanche to distinguish
Company, tho "Lasses" Whitehall themselves with the result that
star minstrels, now in its fourth the scene haa frequently been d**-
year, will be the attraction at theiclared by critics to bo the mos
Colonial Saturday. November 10th. j artistic set ever ased In conjum:
The program to be offered by the i tlon with a minstrel first part. Vo-
only "Lasses" and his forty fellow cal and instrumental music as
artists Is said to be wholly hew‘usual figure largely in The Roof
loth.'ng havleg'Woti retained from Garden and the comedy will be In
•reviuus season*) The owning, nr tho competent hands ot the total It a
d under J4& Up# ^hye “Lgsscs," ‘ Skcet '. Mayo, "Zip"
• by Bunin. Gr.»- of the?
bright spots In
"«'dugue by ’«